Martin Flanagan: Services sector rides to the rescue
This article contains affiliate links. We may earn a small commission on items purchased through this article, but that does not affect our editorial judgement.
But to really gauge how we are doing economically, for more than a generation now it has been a question of looking at the linchpin services sector.
Thankfully, the latest data shows the key industry is in decent fettle despite the Brexit vote. Retail and financial services each chip in about 10 per cent of the sector, but it is the likes of hospitality, restaurants, hotels, pubs, professional services, IT and transport that take its general share of the UK economy up to about 75 per cent.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdIn post-manufacturing Britain, if services thrives we all bask in the sunshine, if it stumbles we feel the chill. Overall, the latest figures for August from services are the clearest sign yet of how after initial post-Brexit nerves in July the economy has proved surprisingly resilient.
We had already seen positive summer retail sales and employment data, and last week we learnt that although construction was in contraction again in August the decline slowed appreciably from July.
Yesterday, services provided the cherry on top, with the Markit/Cips services purchasing managers’ index showing a surprisingly strong reading of 52.9 in August, well up from 47.4 in July, and comfortably above City economists’ forecasts of 50. Any figure above 50 indicates growth.
Does this mean all will go well from here? No, unfortunately. Just as the July panic, when sterling fell to 30-year lows against the US dollar in the wake of the UK’s EU referendum result, now appears to have been overdone, the subsequent bounce could also be transient.
There is something of the phoney war and phoney armistice about the summer’s economic figures. Our mid-term economic fortunes will not really be foreshadowed until Article 50 to leave the EU is triggered and we get a feel of how trade negotiations between the UK and its former single trading bloc partners are panning out.
But even so, while excessive optimism is clearly not appropriate, the services figures show that excessive pessimism on the current economic showing is also misplaced. The national psyche has been bruised by the Leave/Remain split. Not for the first time, services has provided some cheer.